- New Tai Lue alphabet
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New Tai Lue Type alphabet Time period since 1950s ISO 15924 Talu, 354 Direction Left-to-right Unicode alias New Tai Lue Unicode range U+1980–U+19DF Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols. New Tai Lue script, also known as Simplified Tai Lue, is an alphabet used to write the Tai Lü language. Developed in China in the 1950s, New Tai Lue is based on the traditional Tai Lue[citation needed] script developed ca. 1200 AD. The government of China promoted the alphabet for use as a replacement for the Old Tai Le script; teaching the script was not mandatory, however, and as a result many are illiterate in the new script. In addition, the countries of Burma, Laos, Thailand and Vietnam still use Old Tai Le.
Unicode
New Tai Lue script was added to the Unicode Standard in March, 2005 with the release of version 4.1.
The Unicode block for New Tai Lue is U+1980–U+19DF:
New Tai Lue[1]
Unicode.org chart (PDF)0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 A B C D E F U+198x ᦀ ᦁ ᦂ ᦃ ᦄ ᦅ ᦆ ᦇ ᦈ ᦉ ᦊ ᦋ ᦌ ᦍ ᦎ ᦏ U+199x ᦐ ᦑ ᦒ ᦓ ᦔ ᦕ ᦖ ᦗ ᦘ ᦙ ᦚ ᦛ ᦜ ᦝ ᦞ ᦟ U+19Ax ᦠ ᦡ ᦢ ᦣ ᦤ ᦥ ᦦ ᦧ ᦨ ᦩ ᦪ ᦫ U+19Bx ᦰ ᦱ ᦲ ᦳ ᦴ ᦵ ᦶ ᦷ ᦸ ᦹ ᦺ ᦻ ᦼ ᦽ ᦾ ᦿ U+19Cx ᧀ ᧁ ᧂ ᧃ ᧄ ᧅ ᧆ ᧇ ᧈ ᧉ U+19Dx ᧐ ᧑ ᧒ ᧓ ᧔ ᧕ ᧖ ᧗ ᧘ ᧙ ᧚ ᧞ ᧟ Notes - 1.^ As of Unicode version 6.0
See also
- Tai Tham script
- Tai Le script
External links
Categories:- New Tai Lue script
- Writing system stubs
- Alphabetic writing systems
- Languages of Burma
- Languages of Thailand
- Languages of Vietnam
- Tai languages
- 1.^ As of Unicode version 6.0
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